•  31
    Editorial
    with Evert Van Leeuwen and David Thomasma
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 17 (4): 423-423. 1996.
  •  20
    Commentary
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 10 (4): 454-455. 2001.
    This case is both an excellent as well as a sad illustration of the complexities, intensities, and foibles of the issue of sick people to die. Although the reaction expressed here is that of a student, it is also, sadly, the reaction of many an experienced physician in being emotional, irrational, and hasty. The description is a perfect example of the student's dilemma: —altruism versus egocentric motivation.
  •  39
    End-of-life care in The Netherlands and the United States: a comparison of values, justifications, and practices
    with Timothy E. Quill
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 6 (2): 189-. 1997.
    Voluntary active euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide remain technically illegal in the Netherlands, but the practices are openly tolerated provided that physicians adhere to carefully constructed guidelines. Harsh criticism of the Dutch practice by authors in the United States and Great Britain has made achieving a balanced understanding of its clinical, moral, and policy implications very difficult. Similar practice patterns probably exist in the United States, but they are conducted in s…Read more
  •  49
    Practicing Euthanasia: The Perspective of Physicians
    with Keith L. Obstein and Tod Chambers
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 15 (3): 223-231. 2004.